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Sunday, May 01, 2005

Dub Review - May 2005

AFRICAN HEAD CHARGE

VISIONS OF PSYCHEDELIC AFRICA

BEATINK / ON U SOUND CD

Taking Brian Eno’s mission description of the landmark ‘My Life in the Bush of Ghosts’ Bonjo I and a loosely reformed Head Charge re-emerge after a period during which the rest of the world has done their best to catch up. You have to go right back to 1993 for their last On U produced release, the almost crossover ‘In Pursuit of Shashamane Land’ which was a follow-up to the groundbreaking ‘Songs of Praise’ an album whose samples were largely sourced from Alan Lomax’s ‘Cantrometrics’ collection. This new set is right back in that territory from the opening ‘Big Country’ albeit deeper and dubbier than before. Though one gets the impression that the tricksy ‘Surfari’ was more a product of Sherwood and engineer Nick Coplowe rather than the more plainly afrocentric impulses of the Iabinghi Noah, but these come into full play for the rest of the set, most traditionally on the chants ‘Run Come See’ and its version ‘Ran Came Saw’ and on ‘Drumming is a Language’ on which Bonjo fulfils his role as adopted master drummer of Ghana. Funkier, jazzier and plainly more accessible than its predecessors this is probably AHC’s best so far.

SAM COOKE

CARIBBEAN COOKE

? STUDIO 7" VINYL

Billed as ‘Mr Soul meets Mr Dodd’, two acapellas from the originator of smooth soul are run over Studio 1 rhythms selected for the job. There’s always debate about the ethics of this kind of blend, as in the Elvis ‘goes Dread’ piece from last year, but what’s fun for the punter is rarely good for business. ‘Lost & Lookin’’ is crooned over the great "Money Generator" by Karl Bryan and the Afrokats – only recently revived in its original version and unusual for a classic Studio 1 rhythm in that it was never utilised for vocals. Unlike the ‘Party Time’ rhythm originally vocalised by the Heptones but here sounding like its made to measure for Sam’s ‘Love Me’. Faux Studio One artwork completes the package but that’s where vintage pastiche ends as the vinyl pressing is pristine!

DEADBEAT

NEW WORLD OBSERVER

~ SCAPE CD

From the cool perspective of Canada, Scott Monteith aka Deadbeat seems to be picking up the mantle of calculated outrage once donned by Bryn Jones so consistently but to little avail in his lifetime. At least that’s how it seems on ‘Abu Ghraib’ where the ‘new world observer’ seemingly sacrifices his implied detachment with the use of the free speech of a right-wing American radio DJ and ‘Little Town of Bethlehem’ where the helplessness of the ordinary Palestinian is laid bare by a woman’s simple observation of the daily routine of devastation. And the sound of Deadbeat is growing closer to the more accessible side of Muslimgauze, in other words the music Bryn was producing mid-term in his further explorations of percussion, bass and ambience. Thankfully the import of jazz house singer Athesia fails to dilute these largely contemplative undulating rhythms and the considerative mood of this fine set, rather her vocals manage to merge into the overall feel.

DUB SYNDICATE

STONED IMMACULATE

BEATINK / ON U SOUND CD

On U Sound have now moved their reissue programme to Japan whilst awaiting completion of a UK deal for back catalogue, but the good news is that these high-end reissues come with bonus tracks and the multiple-spliff holding technique original artwork. 1991’s ‘Stoned Immaculate’, its title purloined from the high point of a Jim Morrison ‘poem’, was Dub Syndicate at their best, trademark rolling rhythms with the witty and liberal application of well-sourced voice samples mainly from old Jamaican singles, plus the harmonies of Akabu – a sound judiciously carried over from Sherwood’s collaborations with Scratch. Heard fifteen years on now the rhythms perhaps lack variation in pace and maybe the dubbing wasn’t as wild as we like to remember, but the four bonus tracks included are all dubs, one from Far I’s "Wadada’, a part two to ‘Well Tuned Now’ – the only reggae tune I know titled from an ‘Othello’ quote!, ‘Well Mashed’ is the title track dubbed and ‘Barking Mad’ a take on ‘No Dog Barks (When I Play!).

EARL "CHINNA" SMITH & IDRENS

INN DE YARD

HOT CD

Earl ‘Chinna’ Smith is perhaps best recognised as owner of the High Times label and probably the most cultured guitarist from the golden age of roots, though he challenged this title with his slide guitar riffs on Ken Boothe’s cover of U2’s ‘I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For’! Less well known is that he appeared as Earl Flute alongside Horace Andy for one of Keith Hudson’s most compelling productions – ‘Satan Side’. That tune is versioned here in a ‘back a yard’ chilling acoustic take in an outdoor session where Chinna is joined by friends, colleagues and his son in a brave departure from the signature roots reggae band cloak. Reminiscent of the late Bim Sherman’s original acoustic sessions for his later Bollywood infused classic ‘Miracle’, it’s surprising that there aren’t more of these acoustic sets from Jamaica as the island is blessed with so many great singers. Despite the presence of Ras Michael Jnr., Ken Bob and Jah Youth its Chinna who impresses here with his naked, impassioned style – never overwrought. The opening track ‘Homegrown’, as might be expected a paean to da weed, is enough to seduce a listen to the whole set.

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RICKY RANKING

CAN’T TRICK I

BANANA KLAN 12" VINYL

How refreshing to have a new UK label promoted unashamedly as an adventure in modern dub styles, with no disrespect to the few who have kept the flag flying for so many years. Banana Klan is an imprint funded by Rodney Smith aka Roots Manuva and Ricky Ranking is Rod’s MC, superstar of the South London sound system scene for a number of years. His casual, confident style recalls a younger Junior Delgado. This lovely loping rhythm comes in chugging full-on head nod mode with wistfully distant occasional keyboard, no progression, all groove. And the minimalism is carried through to ‘Two Pieces’ where Ricky turns to a gruff DJ style sounding like an early Shabba – no greater compliment. Final track ‘Flootamenatl’ strips and licks back the rhythm but the noodlings on top hark back to Pharoah Sanders/Lonnie Liston Smith territory as space jazz morphs into space dub.

TEMPA ALLSTARS

TEMPA ALLSTARS VOL.2


TEMPA 2XLP

Light years on from Tempa’s Dubstep outings and a whole other dimension than Grime, the stars of those scenes now occupy the vanguard of both head and dance all-comer genres. Kode9 and Daddy G’s HyperDub outings from last year, ‘Sign of the Dub’ and ‘Spit’ were not exactly the future of dub as one can’t imagine any other artists occupying that deeply fucked-up space, but the challenge was out. Here they retreat from the abyss and skirt on the edge with ‘Babylon (Dub Mix)’ and leave Geeneus to take the blows with the awesome sub-roller ‘Congo’. The whole set fades down the techno and old 2step inputs, ramps up the drum and bass and brings forward the dub. El-P, Loefah and Digital Mystikz make up the crew in like style – everything that the Illbient scenet wanted and failed to be.

VARIOUS

SHAKE THE NATIONS - A NEW BREED OF DUB IV

DUBHEAD CD

This one snuck through in 2004 mysteriously evading this column’s attention, a dub of many nations sampler in the style that DubHead has applied mainly to the UK in the past. Twilight Circus’ Ryan Moore, a Canadian ex-pat in Holland dedicated to Jamaican music, kicks off with his latest incarnation as the Dub Project and the sound of ‘Impact’ expands into a more elastic, abstract framework contrasting with his recently established nu-roots style as displayed on the churning closer, returning as Twilight with Big Youth for ‘Dub is What We Need’. In between these the international highlights are Japan’s ‘Trial Production’ who may have a mundane name but come with a clearly well-developed bag of influences as their ‘Roots Exotica’ attests and from France Brain Damage with Black Sifichi may be in the area of Ry Cooder’s ‘Paris, Texas’ with their opening sample there again Cooder wasn’t bashful about trampling Blind Willie Johnson’s path but ‘Circle Dub’ emerges into a more of a space cowboy epic. Sir Larsie I are from Germany, AB-10 Norway, Sism-X France and Infantry Rockers and Sound Imperium both from the USA. Other high quality sides are lifted from recent releases by UK nu roots stalwarts Vibronics, Nucleus Roots, Iration Steppers and Jah Warrior.

VARIOUS

RELAXIN’ WITH LOVERS VOLUME 4

SONY MUSIC ASSOCIATED RECORDS CD

When in Beijing people are likely to visit the Great Wall or the Forbidden City. Me, I visit the Grand World Second-Hand Electronics Market and visit the many CD stalls there picking up fantastic bargains of Japanese cut-outs such as this Lovers Rock volume from 2003 featuring the work of Clem Bushay. The series is still in print as far as I can discern with other material from DEB, Studio 16, Trojan and homegrown Japan. I already confessed to an irrational obsession with Lovers Rock but anyone taking the trouble to search this one out will come under its spell too, primarily for the presence of a version of the old doo-wop chestnut ‘Silhouettes’ here sung by Janet ‘Silly Games’ Kay, however the song is followed by a monster version also featuring DJ Prince Jazzbo and Rico on trombone – truly the epitome of out of ‘strength comes sweetness’. Also irresistible is Louisa ‘Caught You in a Lie’ Marks’ cover of the Jones’ Girls’ ultra-prosaic ‘Mum and Dad’, which runs along the lines ‘… how can I tell my Mum and Dad, I’ve been bad ….’ – you know the story, all against music that like vintage bottled Ladbroke Grove.

VARIOUS

THE SOUND OF DUB – RARE AND SOUNDFUL PEARLS FROM NEW ZEALAND IN DUB (THE GREEN ROOM)

ECHO BEACH CD

By all accounts New Zealand, or Aotearoa as my Kiwi friends would have it, is a place for dubheads. Far away in time, a peaceful island of temperate climate suitable for the growing of weed. Which then in my mind begs the question: is this the right environment for the creation, rather than the consumption, of high quality dub? Germany’s Echo Beach, with as many marketing wheezes as Trojan in the UK, determined to find out with this set – a collaboration with NZ’s Loop Records. The album gets into gear with ‘Speech’ by Pitch Black, a pleasant lope with mix from International Observer – bizarrely an ex-Thompson Twin, followed by another nice tune and another and then a realisation that worthy but embarrassingly naïve lyrics on top of m.o.r reggae riddims is what this is, reaching a dire extreme with Lee Tui’s "Mash’d MZ" by NZ Rasta MP Nandor Tanczos. Grateful then for Joe Dukie and DJ Fitchie, from Fat Freddy’s Drop – best band in the land, and ‘Midnight Marauders’ one of those great tantalising grooves that feels like its about to start for four minutes or so but never does.

Saturday, April 30, 2005

Playlist - 30th April 2005

Ocean Club Berlin / Gudrun Show

Stephen Cheng -Always together -CDR
Shanghai Diva -Daddy Vegas mix -CDR
Iz -Kara torogay -Elephant Records
Abigail Washburn -The lost lamb -AW
The Might Upsetter -Enter the Dragon -Justice League
Augustus Pablo -Columbo -Pressure Sounds
Charlie Boy -Funky strip -Pressure Sounds
Huan Qing -Track 2 -Little Bar Records
Dong People - -CDR
David Darling & the Wulun Bunun -Lugu lugu kan-ibi -Riverboat
Yu Shao- ze -High mountain -Hugo
Streets of Lhasa -track 8 -Sublime Frequncies
Feng Shaoxian -Goats on the hillside -Hugo
Lu Xing -Come round -Hugo
Wang Lei -Earth -Elephant
Alpha 606-Anarchy in China-Touchin’ Bass
Hiroshi Watanabe-Quadra Sky-Klik Records
Junior Delgado-Sons of Slave-Metro Doubles
Tommy Mccook and The Upsetters-Cloak and Dagger-Metro Doubles
Jerry Johnson-Saxman-Wackies
Chris Thomas King-Relevations-Afro Art Records
Felusia:End-Onlookers were upset and threw stones-Demo
Juliette and the Licks-You’re speaking my Language-Hassle
Doyle Bramhall-Dimples-Yep Roc
Millencoln-Farwell my Hell-bURNING HEART rECORDS
The Lionheart Brothers-Pole Dilemma-Munich Records

Saturday, April 23, 2005

Playlist - 23rd April 2005 - Funkology

Breakwater-Let Love In-BMG
Curtis Mayfield-Freddies Dead (Blaze Remix)-
Roberta Flack-Lovin You-MCA
Red Medicine featuring the GQ-Let the Music Play-Promo
Cheryl Lynn-Sweet Kind of Life-Modern R & B
Stevie Wonder-So What the Fuss-Motown
Mint Condition-My Sista-Image
Amerie-1 THING-Columbia
Highlighters-Poppin Popcorn-Rojam
Brother D-How We are Goin to Make the Black Nation Rise-4th and Broadway
Faith-Lucky Day-EMI
Thievery Corporation feat. David Byrne-The Heart is a Lonely Heart-R2 Music
Gerardo Frisina-African Seeds-Schema
Felicia Adams-Feels Good-Soulvibe
Roy Ayers-I am your Mind-BBE
Brooklyn Dreams-Music, Harmony and Rhythm-Millennium
Joe Cocker-Woman to Woman-Sanctuary
Terri Walker-The One That Got Away-Mercury
Segio Mendes and the new Brasil-The Real Thing-Warners
Plant Life-Your Love-Ubiquity
Pascal Rioux-Mr Day-rotax

Saturday, April 16, 2005

Playlist - 16th April 2005

Radio Pnhom Penh -The shiny radio in a blind man’s wallet -Sublime Frequencies
Elly Kasim -Ayam dev lapeh -Sublime Frequencies
N/k -Pua mao mea mao -Sublime Frequencies
Radio Nepal -Danhe cuari -Sublime Frequencies
Hassan Kassayi -Dastgah of Homayoun -Network
Muslimgauze -No human rights for Arabs in Israel -Staalplaat
Ratkje & Blonk -Arnhem 1 -Kontrans
Peter Jacuemyn -Kontrabass solo no.8 -Logos lpd005
Sun O))) -A shaving of the horn that speared you -Southern Lord
Aki Onda -Flickering lights -Phonomena
Otomo Yoshide -Cash dispenser -Noise Asia
Tran Quang Hai -Bashkir xomus -Playasound
Huan Qing -A short meeting -Little Bar Records
Milky Wimp Shake-Boxing Day Blues-Fortuna pop
Trail and Dead-Caterwau-Worlds Apart
Sweet inspirations-Every Day will be like a Holiday-Soul Jazz
The Tamlins-Blatimore-AURALUX
Roy Lee and King Iwah-Give Me Power-Trojan
The Revolutionaries-River Bank-Hot Pot
Women of Mambazo-Mamizolo-Manteca
Pedro Luis Ferrer-Changui Para La Pena-ESCONDIDA
Goldmund-Marching Through Georgia-Type
Mugison-2 bIRDS-
Roger Robinson-Nicola’s Song-Altered Vibes
Choir Boys-Dim Effigies-pfMentum
Roots Manuva-Too Cold-Big Dada
Takagi Masakatsu-Come March-Staubgold
Jori Hulkkonen-Are You Fortean-F Communications
Fred Giannelli-Delirious-Scioence Recordings
Stromba-Tickle ME dUB-Fat Cat

Saturday, April 09, 2005

Playlist - 9th April 2005

Leroy Smart-Mister Smart in dub-Jamaican Recordings
Stranger Cole-Capture land-Wackies
Highvisators-Dub fever-Jarring Effects
Ossie Hibert & the Revolutionaries-Fletcher’s lan-Hot Pot
Khonnor-Crapstone-Type
Triosk-Love chariot-Leaf
Psapp-Leaving in coffins-Arable
Goldmund-My neighbourhood-Type
Loren Mazzacane-Connors/Alan Licht-Hoffman Estates-Drag City
Prefuse 73-Hide ya face (Shaolin finale)-Warp
Roots Manuva-A Haunting-Big Dada
McEnroe-Working in the factory (instr.)-Vertical Form
Meteo/Thiel-Moonoverdada (Peter Grummich mix)-Meteosound
Orchestra Regional de Kayes-sanjina-Luka Bop
U roy and john holt-Wear you to the Ball-Trojan
Field Music-Shorter Shorter-MI
King Creosote-Klutz-Domino
Streets of Lhasa- -SUBLIME FREQUENCIES
Tinariwen-Aldechen-Manteca
India Mill-Caribesque-India Mill
Duffy-Come Home-
The flotation Project-CrASH Test Dummies-Viper
The Legendery Len-Yuri Hair Salon-
Augustus Pablo and Herman-Aquarius Rock-Pressure Sounds
Augustus Pablo and Herman Allstars-East of the River Nile/River Nile Version-Rockers
Glen Brown and Friends-Dirty Harry-Hot Pot
The Revolutionaries-Earthquake Dub-Hot Pot
Dillinger-Trial and Cross Dub-Jamaican Recordings

Saturday, April 02, 2005

Playlist - 2nd April 2005

Cornershop -Hotrocks -Meccicortradstp
Kode9 + Daddi Gee -Sign of the dub -Hyperdub
AFX -Steppingfilter -Rephlex
Digital Mystiks -Twisup -Digital Mystiks
Amanda AllStars & King Tubby -Behold a dub -World Music Network
I Roy -Rasta on a Sunday -Hot Pot
King Stitt -Live Jah Jah -Studio One
Tommy McCook -The great Tommy McCook -Trojan
The Sharks -Music answer -Studio One
Jah Stitch -Black harmony killer -Trojan
Augustus Pablo -Hap ki do (version) -Santic
Sam Cooke -Lost and lookin’ -? Studio
Dennis Brown -Song my mother used to sing -Pressure Sounds pss008
Mu -BuBunny -VVm
Clayhill -Moon I hide -Eat Sleep
John Doe -Heartless -Yep Roc
Mike Ladd -Shake it -Thirsty Ear
Cliff Carlisle -Mouse’s ear blues -Indigo
The Iguanas -9 voltheart -Yep Roc
Booker T & the MGs -My sweet potato -Manteca
The Bo-Keys -Spanish delight -Manteca
Elder Beck -Rock and roll sermon pt.1 -Manteca
BMG 44 -44 -Notable
African Head Charge -The big country -Beatink
Issa Bagayogo -Kalan nege -Manteca
Cui Jian -Blue bone -Jingwen cdr
Tweet -Turna da lights off (instrumental) -Atlantcipro

Friday, April 01, 2005

Dub Review - April 2005



OSSIE HIBBERT AND THE REVOLUTIONARIES

EARTHQUAKE DUB

HOT POT CD/LP

Steve Barrow digs deeper with this second release on Hot Pot featuring the relatively unknown, at least outside the Masonic lodges of reggae, arranger and keyboardist Ossie Hibbert who perhaps should be given more props for his behind the scenes work at Channel One and Joe Gibbs. This is Hibbert’s debut dub album; he later went on to produce Greg Isaacs’ ‘Mr. Isaacs’ set, together with its dub companion ‘Leggo Dub’. The title track is take on Dennis Brown’s ‘Whip them Jah’ using the Royals’ ‘Pick up the Pieces’ rhythm, other recognisable staple sources include ‘Black Diamond’ from Keith & Tex’s ‘Stop That Train’, ‘Collie in Dub’, ‘Death Sentence’ and ‘Kissinger’ all derived from the Abyssinians’ ‘Declaration of Rights’ and ‘Pain Land Dub’ from ‘Rainy Night in Georgia’. There’s a clutch of one away rhythms here but the majority of the set relies on versions of old rock steady classics. A cleanly built drum and bass centred affair the likes of which we don’t hear much these days.

MACKA FAT

BEHIND THE COUNTER

BACK YARD CD

France’s claim to the centre of European reggae excellence is furthered by this excellent Dennis Bovell produced effort from Macka Fat, a band taking their name from Jackie Mittoo’s vintage Studio One album. The only gripe is the obviously lightweight fragile vocals, improved when delivered in harmony, but this weakness is more than balanced out by the strength of the tunes and Bovell’s arrangements and mixes that place the sound squarely back in that rich early eighties vein somewhere between Sly and Robbie and the Ladbroke Grove sound of Aswad.

TOMMY McCOOK

REAL COOL

TROJAN DOUBLE CD

Whether Tommy McCook was actually the leader of the legendary Skatalites who knows, but what’s certain is that the tenor saxophonist McCook was among the most innovative and influential Jamaican musicians amongst a generation of giants, and was present at recording of many of the foundation tunes of both ska and reggae. Another graduate of the Kingston's Alpha Cottage School he began by touring with dance bands but would often abscond into the hills to participate in the freeform musical groundations of Count Ossie and the informal collective of the Rasta drummers and chanters who gathered to reason - musically. After the Skatalites burned out he formed the Supersonics, house band at Duke Reid's Treasure Isle studio, and proceeded to create a series of rhythms that endure to this day on classic hits from artists including Alton Ellis, Justin Hinds, the Techniques and the Paragons. In the seventies he became an essential component of the interchangeable brass section that drove the militant, jazzy or funky sounds colouring roots reggae, notably in many classic Bunny Lee, Observer, Upsetter and Yabby You productions dubbed by King Tubby. This excellent collection concentrates on his rock steady and reggae sides and together with the Heartbeat set issued a few years ago is about as definitive a view of this great talent as we could hope for.

PRINCE FAR I & CREATION REBEL

MUNICH 1983

SOUNDBOARD CDR

Amongst those singers, DJs, vocal groups, musicians and producers of the golden age of roots reggae perhaps the best-loved by the UK audience was the man known as Prince Far I - not so much a DJ in the classic style, but more a chanter of words. Far I came a long way from Studio 1 and Joe Gibbs to working with Adrian Sherwood & Co. and on ‘Cry Tuff Dub Encounter Chapter III’ sharing the credits with the likes of David Toop, Steve Beresford and Ari Up from the Slits. The tunes on this CDR though were recorded live from the soundboard at the Logo club in Munich in 1983, the year of his death. This illicit piece of reggae history is worth seeking out from within the circle of dedicated Far I devotees as the only extant live recording of the DJ is with Suns of Arqa and not really representative of his performances. Backing band Creation Rebel open up with some required pleasantries before Far I enters with ‘Big Fight’ a.k.a. Dreadlocks versus Babylon a fight commentary delivered on Spear’s ‘Joe Frasier’ rhythm and recorded for Joe Gibbs, followed by two On U Sound staples ‘Prodigal Son’ and ‘Virgin’, the latter straight to the head of Richard Branson! The sound is clean and crisp with a heavy bass return throughout the Prince’s set which closes with his nearly singjay style on ‘What You Gonna Do on Judgement Day’ before Creation Rebel return with a more serious ‘African Space’.

ROOTS UNDERGROUND

TRIBESMAN ASSAULT
WACKIES CD/LP

'Tribesman Assault' made a brief appearance a couple of years ago and is back again, a genuine seventies reissue from around 1977 collecting Lloyd "Bullwackie" Barnes' early tunes recorded in Jamaica at a series of studios - Randys, Black Ark and Treasure Isle - that sparked the building of the House of Wackies back in the Bronx. Included are the rhythm tracks of the African Jamaicans' "Girl Of My Dreams" and Tyrone Evans' "Dread Like Me"; also versions of "Ballistic Affair" and The Righteous Flames' "I Wasn't Born To Be Lonely. Roots Underground are basically the early Wackies house band based back in Jamaica, Reckless Breed, featuring the guitar of none other than Jerry Hitler! The there are nine dubs, mostly versioning old but lesser-known favourites, distinguished by some occasionally outrageous funktastic drumming from Jah Scotty and Johnny Diaz. The set closes with the sole vocal, a reading of 'Open the Gates' from K.C.White and the Lovejoys.

SLY AND ROBBIE’S TAXI SOUND

A CELEBRATION OF 30 YEARS OF TAXI RECORDS

AURALUX CD/LP

This seems a strange release from Dave Katz and the Auralux people as it only seems like yesterday that Pressure Sounds put out their ‘Unmetered Taxi’ selection. Whereas that set started with the Rhythm Twins’ most sublime moment this one ends with it, far be it from me to do anything other than heartily recommend any album that features the Tamlin’s version of ‘Baltimore’, the Randy Newman song perhaps best known in its Nina Simone incarnation but taken to another level here. The 12" cut has an extended verse before we are hit with that sweetly aching harmony chorus that repeats into the dub together with a brass swell imported direct from heaven and in stark contrast to the song’s bleak message. The rest of the album collects other key outputs from the late 70's and early 80's, with General Echo is at his rampant best with ‘Drunken Master’, a salute to the early Jackie Chan kung-fu epic; Junior Delgado’s stark depiction of prison life on ‘Fort Augustus’ spurred on by an equally urgent rhythm and although ‘Revolution’ is one of Dennis Brown’s most favoured sides I always preferred the more triumphant ‘Part 2’.

VARIOUS ARTISTS

ROUGH GUIDE TO DUB

WORLD MUSIC NETWORK CD

To cut to the chase this is a dub primer sourced from the Blood and Fire catalogue, makes sense as together with Peter Dalton the label’s Steve Barrow is co-author of the Rough Guide to Reggae still the best place to start an understanding of this most torturous of musical genres. Dominating proceedings is King Tubby of course, again no surprise as this is as it should be, plus students Princes Jammy and Phillip, Scratch the Upsetter, the late Errol ‘ET’ Thompson and Crucial Bunny from Channel One. The only fresh track on the set is alone worth the price of entry, ‘Behold A Dub’ by Amanda All Stars and King Tubby is from a Larry ‘Black & White’ Marshall production and has Tubbs in one of his more vicious moods where he obviously kicked the dog on the way out that morning. ‘Noah Sugar Pan’ is probably the most luscious dub squeezed out by the Upsetter from the magnificent Congos – soon to return to Blood & Fire with a brand new album, ‘General Version’ is Jammy’s brutal strip of Dennis Brown’s ‘Want To Be No General’ and there’s top contributions from Yabby You, Glen Brown and Keith Hudson. Basically amounts to a great tool for the conversion of dub heathens.

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VARIOUS

BABYLON – ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK

CHRYSALIS CD

Hopefully the release of this soundtrack CD heralds the soon come appearance of Franco Rosso’s film where the music played such a key role. It’s only been available over the past few years in fleeting quasi-bootleg versions and another viewing would help to re-evaluate its contribution to the sadly inadequate history of the sound system in UK. The revived album is somewhat of a disappointment; especially the Dennis Bovell produced fillers which range from funky little Julio Finn harp-driven jazzers to pleasant instrumental diversions best described as incidental. Of course the Yabby You and Aswad tunes are classics and have been revived over and over since the advent of digital times, even so ‘Warrior Charge’ always manages to stir the blood. But it’s I Roy’s ‘Whap’n Bap’n’, a crossover stab at the then fresh street styles of NYC, that emerges with an enhanced reputation – on its first appearance the album from which it came was dismissed by both hip hop and roots fans.

VARIOUS

DOWN SANTIC WAY: SANTIC JAMAICAN PRODUCTIONS

PRESSURE SOUNDS CD/2XLP

A belated follow-up to Pressure Sounds’ earliest release ‘An Even Harder Shade of Black’ featuring the roots rebel productions of Leonard ‘Santic’ Chin. The album opens with two takes on Pablo’s ‘Pablo in Dub’, unusual in that the tune originated as an instrumental in the typical doom-lite style created by the foundation melodica player only to versioned by Horace Andy who added the lyrics to the now classic ‘Problems’. And its version to version through the set as we find Freddie McKay’s vocal version and a Santic All Stars dub to Pablo’s kung fu movie reaction ‘Hap Ki Do’, Jah Lloyd’s great ‘Tom Shooter’ containing the unforgettable line "Not even the dog that piss against the wall of Babylon shall escape his (Jah’s) wrath" followed Tubby’s cannon shots from mashing the echo spring on ‘Shooter Dub’ and perhaps the jewel of the set for collectors – the appearance of Gregg Isaacs as William Shakepare (sic) on ‘Late at Night’ proving, in a disarmingly slightly off-key delivery, why he was so irresistible. But the best is reserved for last as the under-recorded Paul Whiteman a.k.a. Paul Blackman manager of Augustus Pablo croons the simple plaint ‘I Don’t Want To Lose You’ over an achingly delicate Pablo melodica line. This will be difficult set to overtake in the revive compilation of the year stakes.

VARIOUS

DANCEHALL SESSIONS

SESSIONS 2xCD

Mr. Ian McCann comes out to play again and selects a set of juicy dancehall sounds from the mid-eighties through the following ten years sourced mainly from UK’s now defunct Fashion imprint and the good offices of Tubby’s Firehouse spar Fatman. McCann rarely appears for such duties these days, a shame as he always has a wry angle and here in the shape of a few good words for dancehall in a short essay examining the lately reviled phenomena via a class analysis that should be expanded a little more seriously. But back to the tunes, a mix of the ruff and righteous, pop and prurience in equal measure, a reminder of the great lost soul voice of Frankie Paul on his take of Toni Tony Tone’s genuine modern r’n’b classic ‘Little Walter’ and how easy it was for the sucker music media to dismiss a true original in Shabba Ranks as he delivers a lesson to the youth in ‘Must A Fi Learn’. Standing above all is dance floor crasher ‘Zig it Up’ from Flourgon & Ninjaman, clashing in 1989 on this totally mindless dance exhortation that mutates Aaron Neville’s once sedate ‘Hercules’ breakbeat.

Saturday, March 26, 2005

Playlist - 26th March 2005 - Baked Goods

STUDIO PANKOW -Heidelberger Platz -(City Centre Offices)
MURMUR -Polar -(Meanwhile)
THE CONNECTION MACHINE -Perception Fuse -(Down Low)
NOBODY -Tori Oshi -(Plug Research)
POPULOUS -Hip-Hop Cocotte -(Morr Music)
BARBARA MORGENSTERN and ROBERT LIPPOK -Winter -(Monika)
SANSO-XTRO -The Last Leaf -(Type)
NACHT PLANK -Carhaix Nonant -(Lampse)
THE REMOTE VIEWER -Last Night You Said Goodbye, Now It Seems Years -(City Centre Offices)
WORKING FOR A NUCLEAR FREE CITY -The Tape -(Blowout)
PARA ONE ft. TES & TTC -Beat Down -(Shadetek)
COUNT BASS D -Dollar Bill -(Ramp)
EDAN -Promised Land -(Lewis)
SOLO-MAN SPECTRUM -Popcorn In Heaven -(Botanica Del Jibaro)
SONAR BASE -Processing Plant -(SCSI-AV)
ADJ -B-Line -(Outside)
DR LINDH -Professor Laphroaigh -(SCSI-AV)
JEREMY ELLIS -'Lil 808 Thing -(Ubiquity)
PENDLE COVEN -R.E.S.P.E.C.T. -(Modern Love)
UNKNOWN ARTIST -Dry Ice Dub -(Shadetek)
DJ PINCH & P.DUTTY -Alien Tongue -(Tectonic)
STRATEGY -Unknown -(Community Library)
JOHN CONVERTINO -Curb -(Sommerweg)
CHRISTIAN WALLUMROD ENSEMBLE -A Year >From Easter #2 -(ECM)
RYAN TEAGUE -Prelude #2 -(Type)
GRIM DUBS -Volume 4A1 -(Werk)

Saturday, March 19, 2005

Playlist - 19th March 2005

Tommy Guerrero and Gadget-Funny to party-Function
Sun Electric-Tee-Apollo
Smadj-C’est comme si c’etait-Mind the Gap
X-Plastaz-Msimu kwa msimu-Out Here
Retina.it-Le buitar-Mousikelab
Ania Losinger-Xala pt. 11-Tonus Music
Epo -Doorstep-Scape
Riojii Ikeda-3’33’’-Staalplaat
De Portables-Flash (half way)-Kraak
Es-Sadepaivat-Fonal
James Mark Thomas-Ballad of Quecreek Mine-Beau Rivage
Si-Cut.db-Long Player-
Bembeya Jazz National-Armee Guineenne-Sterns’ Africa
Mix Master Mike-Full Range Ear Muff-Immortal
Ariel Pink-Immune to Emotion-Paw Tracks
MJ Hibbett-Work’s all right (if a proper job)-Artists against success
Louis Prima-Basin Street Blues-Putumayo
Danyel Waro-Bayoun-Rough Guide
Baka Beyond-Kobo-March Hare Music
Cottonwood-Self Talk 1977-Sans Culottes
Kate and Anna McGarrigle-Sunflower-Munich Records
Jose Gonzalez-Crosses-PeaceFrog
Cracklebox -Winter Instrumental-Earsugar Jukebox
Marco Passarani-Earth’s Heart-Peacefrog
Ether-Contra-Mousike Lab
Pan/tone-No pecas par favor-Bip Hop

Saturday, March 12, 2005

Playlist - 12th March 2005 - Funkology

Plant Life-When she smiles she lights the sky-Easy League
Chaka Khan-We Got Each Other-Warner Bros
Vanhunt-Down Here In Hell-Capitol
The Rebirth-Shahe It-Kajmere
A Bossa Electrica-Skindo Lele-Raw Fusion
Jagg-Take Time-Vinyl Masterpiece
Kings of Tomorow-Make Believe-Trouble
Average White Band-What you gonna do for me-RCA
Mille Jackson-Somethin ‘bout cha-Amigo
AG Thomas-The 1,2-Abbsoul
Frank McCombe-I’ll be A foul-Bobbeesound Music
Marvin Gaye-Let’s Get It On-
Sharon Jones-Genuine-BBE
Valerie abd Bobby Capers-West 4th Street-Warner’s
Fela Kuti-Sharkara-Universal
Harrison Crump-Ride-Electric Chair
Skyy-First Time Around (Disc Mix)-Salsoul
Sharlane Hector-Holdin’ Me-Atlantic Jaxx
Wild Sugar-Bring it on home-TSOB
Nate James-Set the Tone-OneTwo

Saturday, March 05, 2005

Playlist - 5th March 2005

Vangelis-Tears in the rain-East West
Marsen Jules-Aile d’aigle-City Centre Offices
Arovane-Ten houses-City Centre Offices
Kintopp-In fernen Landern/Brucke-Staubgold
SWOD-I think he was a journalist-City Centre Offices
Gaston-Slavsstein-Beau Rivage
Pornswordtabacco-Snake Cake Station-City Centre Offices
Michaela Melian-Brautlied-Monika
Robert Lippok-Rearrange-Monika
Cobra Killer-I like when it burns a bit-Monika
Toydeath-Mosher cat-CDR
Suicide-Devastation-Mute
Alter Ego-Rocker-Mute
Roy Shirley-Touch Them-Trojan
The Upsetters-Dub It-Trojan
The Ethopians-Muddy Water-Soul Jazz
Roots Manuva-Double Drat-Big Dada
DubTronix meets Dub Wise-Dark-Brainquake / Omega
65 Days of Static-Hole-65 Days of Static
Logh-Destinymanifesto-Bad Taste
Milli Encolin-Ray-Burning Heart
Caribou-Yeti-Leaf
Alec Empire-Go to get out-
No Arbuckle-Punk Rocker-Six Shooter Records
Matt Sweeney-Beast for thee-Domino
Blaze Foley-The Oval Room-Munich
Olaf Hund-Gymnopedia No4-10 Compactes
Pedro-Assembled By-Melodic

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Dub Review - March 2005

GLEN BROWN & FRIENDS

RHYTHM MASTER VOLUME ONE

HOT POT CD/LP

Its tough out there for specialist music labels so the imminent birthing of two new reggae revive labels is good news. Blood and Fire’s Steve Barrow is the expectant father of two, first up being Hot Pot, a subsidiary of Cooking Vinyl, shortly to be followed by the long-anticipated and equally overdue Microphonic – dedicated to the art of the DJ. Artist producer Glenmore ‘the Godson’ Brown is responsible for some of the toughest rhythms this side of Yabby You, and like the Jesus Dread many of his tunes were mixed down by the great King Tubby. The late eighties saw three great Greensleeves compilations on his work covering vocals, DJs and instrumentals/dubs; these are long gone now and the appearance of ‘Termination Dub’ a few years ago only served to increase demand and expectation for a serious reissue programme of his exceptional catalogue. And so the LP version of this first volume is a ‘one riddim’ selection of the immortal ‘Dirty Harry’ originally version by saxist Richard Hall from the vocal cut ‘Realise’ voiced by Glen and Ritchie MacDonald from the Chosen Few. The CD contains bonus tracks including Greg Isaacs ‘One One Cocoa’ and Glen Brown’s own vocal versions ‘Save Our Nation’ and ‘Away with the Bad’. A classic, recommended without reservation.

CALVIN ‘BUBBLES’ CAMERON

ONE PEOPLE

WAREIKA HILL SOUNDS 12" SINGLE

As Calvin ‘Bubbles’ Cameron is a veteran trombonist with time served in Tommy McCook's Supersonics, Count Ossie's Mystic Revelation, The Light Of Saba, and The Skatalites, one might expect brightly charging brass led dancer numbers mixed with throbbing nyahbinghi drenched chanters – and you would not be disappointed. Cameron is a long-time session player based in the Caribbean and his family is soaked in the music business. It’s shrewd of the team up at Honest Jons to mine this particular vein carefully as other labels might have easily come up with a set to fall under a strict nostalgia banner – let’s not forget that such musicians never made their living playing this kind of music, let alone jazz. ‘Sweet Incense’ is a mid-tempo casual bone vamp like one of those friendly warm up numbers before the brass hammer drops. And so it does on ‘One People’ where the full-line up swings in action on top of a much busier rhythm that’s rinsed out again on the pumping bass version, the cut that DJs will remember. Then all is back in balance with ‘Throne’, a binghi stutter in the true ‘Babylon Gone Down’ Count Ossie style. Rush for the first pressing, it’s a true piece coming in a three-colour silk-screened sleeve with handwritten notes by Mr. Cameron.

DADDY FREDDY

HARDCORE

PROUD OF THAT CD

Any early promise signalled by the UK fusion of ragga and hip hop spluttered and failed in the late eighties, its remains feeding the indigent embers of jungle. Although Daddy Freddy might have been largely forgotten following a series of superstar patronage, the boy certainly has done good in the career revival stakes over the last few years, working to best advantage his entrée into the new ruff chic so brutally engineered by the recently shy Rootsman on the great ‘Old School – New School’ set. But this new monster eighteen track album out of Germany’s P.O.T. label is too much chant, rap and scat packed onto an undistinguished set of lame one-dimensional riddims. Worse still the presence of Joseph Cotton and Freddy’s mentor Ranking Joe is wasted on weak material, unbelievably Joe is only put to work on unison vocal. Let’s hope Freddy meets Scud or Rupture one day.

HIGHVISATORS

IN A DUBTONE – HIGHTONE MEETS IMPROVISATORS DUB

JARRING EFFECTS CD

Two of the new French dub institutions come together in this set out last spring sometime – but only arriving in the UK via the Orient late in the year. Improvisators Dub have appeared spasmodically on tasty little 7" releases on imprints not unlike, and obviously in tribute to, Pablo’s red and yellow JA Rockers label. And their music is in deference to the late melodica king, deep and spiritually driven vibrations. The clash with High Tone was bound to be just that as they are the Gallic equivalent of ADF and it’s remarkable that they have not yet clashed with their UK counterparts given their connections with Marseille, North Africa and other points of south. I assume the (re)mixes here are on previously issued tracks and are credited to Lenfant, Manutension, Knarf and P-Rav, with the centrepiece being the latter’s muscular workout on ‘Dub Fever’, a stomping steppers with what sounds like Jah Youth samples on top of insistent horn stabs.

BILL LASWELL

VERSION 2 VERSION

ROIR CD

Glancing at the track listing titles like ‘Dystopia’, ‘Simulacra’ and ‘System Malfunction’ tended to cast a feeling of slight nausea over me before the music began and I can’t help thinking that if Jah Wobble, on bass duties here, had been asked to name the tunes then I might have been looking forward to the journey a little more. But what happened was that the warm thunder of Wobble’s bass wormed its way to the back of my brain and stayed there uninterrupted through a slow spinal massage of circa 80BPMs for fully five tunes and over forty minutes, right until the final track’s more urgent pace drew me back from the brink of total submission. This is Laswell’s fifth release for ROIR, a self-styled never ending dub caravan, with the same faithful crew on board, co-writer Wobble, keyboardist Bernie Worrell, percussionist Karsh Kale, and drummer/percussionist Abdou Mboup. It’s difficult to see how they will ever escape this inevitably alchemical orbit, condemned forever to wear a deep groove in the ionosphere.

RANKING DREAD

RANKING DREAD IN DUB

SILVER KAMEL CD

An overdue reappearance for one of the most celebrated album covers in reggae, originally released in 1982 this album gained cult status due in part to the artwork of Rod Vass, featuring the stylised head of a dread in black and white on red background. The first half has five tracks by Sly and Robbie mixed by King Tubby and his pupil Scientist mixes the Roots Radics for the second tranche of five tracks. Time plays tricks as I don’t recall the opening ‘Bom Dub’ as being so hopelessly off-kilter, but it’s rescued by the intro to a dub of the Wailers’ ‘I don’t want to wait in vain’ when the MC declares: ‘… I man don’t wanna watch no TV, I man wanna listen dub LP! Go deh …’ Exactly what the late Ranking Dread has to do with all this is less than clear although it seems that production provenance is tracked back to his work with Tapper Zukie. Its Tubbys all the way though as the classically mixed ‘Dub Land’ could easily grace any collection of his finest mixes and Scientist’s snappy take of Dawn Penn’s ‘No No No’, predictably as ‘Yes Yes Yes dub’, could walk away with best in show for all efforts on that rhythm, especially when utilising the wobbliest bass syndrum in town.

RANKING JOE

DUB IT IN A DANCE

TROJAN CD

Through the seventies Ranking Joe built a solid, if unspectacular, reputation as a DJ in Jamaica, but it was not until he came to the UK to tour as part of the Ray Symbolic Hi-Fi package – the first for a sound system – that his career rocketed on the back of his dynamic performances with selector Jah Screw. The set was recorded and released to cash in on that success and captures Joe at his very rude and rampant best. The more traditional roots tunes are backed by the Gladiators Band, but rougher sound of the Roots Radics emerges as dominant for the numbers inna early dancehall style. Strange now listening back to the assured slackness of ‘Cocks Man’ that predates the tentative street smarts of L.L. Cool J and Slick Rick by a good five years, and how innocent it all seems now that Kylie could make Joe blush. Joe’s DJ style had enough old school cultural nuance to make his developing tougher dancehall style acceptable to the reggae Taliban, his consequent stylistic swing made him unique – best evidenced on the opening track here a tribute to a legendary UK brand, ‘Clark’s Booty Style’ was never so hip

LEROY SMART

MR. SMART IN DUB

JAMIACAN RECORDINGS LP/CD

Leroy Smart is one of that elite pack of roots & lovers vocalists who never really hit the big time but nevertheless managed to keep on recording and generate a loyal audience amongst reggae aficionados, particularly for his immaculate work with Jimmy producer Radway. Mr. Smart, aka the Don, also came over as one heavy dude, a sort of meaner, moodier Cool Ruler who nevertheless often appeared to be on the edge of some sort of emotional crack-up in mid-song such was the quality in his voice and delivery. We don’t get that here in full effect, but all the dubs carry that voice in the intro and, compared to a lot of other disappointments in the series of Bunny Lee studio floor sweepings, this is a much more solid listen – primarily due to the retention of the horns in the mixes and the quality of the vintage rhythms but the highlight remains the pumping version of the title with plenty spring echo generated lashings through the mix. Speaking of mix though – no credits lead to suspicions of a more modern makeover.

VARIOUS

REGGAE GOODIES VOLUMES 1 & 2

WACKIES CD

Both of the original volumes of Reggae Goodies came out around 1977 on Bullwackies' City Line imprint, celebrating NY subway track ending at White Plains Road - and Wackies' headquarters. Both were compilations mostly made up from 7" A-sides that had appeared over the previous few years on associated labels like Versatile, Rawse and Senrab. Both are pure vocal affairs with the first volume covering the more JA-based roots concerns of the day, and that reflected in productions such as Don Carlos’ ‘Black Harmony (Killer)’, Stranger Cole’s broodingly intense ‘Capture Land’ and album highlight John Clarke’s starkly prosaic ‘Recession’. The second set is more a lovers thing, but the opener from the Love Joys, a febrile harmony treatment of Carlton & the Shoes ‘Sweet Feelings’ – last versioned so confidently by 2 Bad Card for On U Sound, the Chosen Brothers sequestering of Ken Boothe’s ‘Say You’ and ‘Black Root’ a tough closing instrudub from Wanachi can’t really rescue this weaker set. On the whole one for Wackies fanatics only.

WILLIE WILLIAMS & COUSIN MARSHALL

ROCKING UNIVERSALLY

BASIC REPLAY 12" SINGLE

In the early eighties, whilst both were moving between New York and Toronto, Jackie Mittoo and Willie Williams revived their respective Studio One classics ‘Real Rock’ and ‘Armagideon Time’ combination style for this new jazzier, rougher version. Drafting in Cousin Marshall, introduced on the label as ‘The Son of Alton Ellis’ and a percussionist with a nname staright out of the Mothers of Invention, Bongo Gene, they created this new cut aimed directly for the dancefloor. Rub-a-dub style deejaying runs throughout but Willie Williams' new vocal is cool to the point of narcolepsy, all delivered on top of shuffling tom-toms and the keyboards sounding like Jackie Mittoo has just had a private lesson from Monk. The dub side completes the otherness of the whole thing with daft random mumbling, sirens and assorted odd effects. Certainly the time is right for a ‘Real Rock’ one rhythm album.

Saturday, February 26, 2005

Playlist - 26th February 2005

Diplo-Diplo rhythm-Big Dada
Upsetters-Lizard Stick-Trojan
Prince Far I-Big Fight-
Rhythm and Sound-See Mi Version-Burial Mix
Lena-Floating Roots-Quatermass
Alice Coltrane-Huntington Ashram Monastery-Impulse
LZ-Track 8-CDR
Robert Pete Williams-My Wandering Around-Arhoolie
John Fahey-View east from the B &0 Railroad Viaduct and the Riggs Road Intersection-Water
Alex Dea-Angst angel in Singapore-CDR
Boom Bip-The Move-Lex
69 Corp-Our Present to the Future-69 Corp
Meloboy -Hot Love (DJ Koze Mix)-Novamute
Captain Beefheart-Old Fart at Play-Reprise
Badly Drawn Boy-The Shining-TXNL
The Wedding Present-Always the Quiet One-Tone
The Chris Stamey-Conspiracy Theory-Yep Roc
Ali Farka Toure-La Drogue-World Circuit
BlueStar-Catch This Fire-
Lion and Tigers- -Trial and error
The Jivers and The Brother Dan all Stars-Donkey Returns-Trojan
The Jivers and The Brother Dan all Stars-Wear My Crown-Trojan
The Gyuto Monks Tantric Choir-Sacred Chants-Ryko

Saturday, February 19, 2005

Playlist - 19th February 2005

Audio

Colourbox -Baby I love you so -Roots Radics
Dillinger -CB200 -Hip
Jstar -Thug fever -Jstar r001
Dr Alimontado -Born for a purpose/Reason for living -Greensleeves
Elvis & Sound Dimension -In the ghetto -? Studio
Johnny Trunk -Sister Woo -Trunk
Arthur Russell -She's the star/I take this time -Upside
Oki -Afghan herbal garden -Tonkori cdr
Connie Francis -Siboney -2046
Pedestrian -Toss & turn -Ant Records
Albert Ayler Quartet -Love Cry/Truth is Marching In/Our Prayer -Revenant
Gary Lucas & Joseph van Wissem -A hawk from a handsaw -Wire Tapper
Elliott Sharp -Anamnesia -Emanem
Orlando Jacinto Garcia -Separacion -New Albion
Plastikman -Snark -Novamute
butt hole surfers -hairway to steven -blast first
mats gustafssons -hidros 3 -small town supersound s +
paal nilssen-love / ken vandermark -duel pleasure
david lee myers / thomas dimuzio -uncertain symmetry -korm plastics
strings with evan parker -emanem 4302-
thomas koner -nuuk -mille plateaux media
connie francis siboney -emi -Pm
venetian snares -prophylactic eye head -sublight
arcane device -deaf men hear no tales-rer
ron geesin -hiding haul of voices , hail -ron
carl craig -twilight -planet e
deathprod -reference frequencies -rune grammafon
mori -patton / zorn -heamophilliac
captain beefheart -one man sentence (manchester 1980) -ozitcd
vasara . -sravaka-p.s.f
ruins . -tzomborgha-ipecac
sachi hayasaka . -minga-tzadik
hoahio . -peek-ara
hoahio . -ohayo!-hoahio+
adachi tomomi-royal chorous-yo
thurston moore -rece for jetsun dolma -victo
urban myth & steve beresford -live at the friends meeting house -Ziq

Saturday, February 12, 2005

Playlist - 12th February 2005 - Funkology

Ripple-A Funky Song-Charly
Sir Joe Quarterman and free Soul-I Got so much trouble in my mind-Interscope
Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings-How Long Do I Have to Wait for you -Daptone Records
Crusho-Someone to Love-Q-Tape Records
Taana Gardner-When you Touch Me-West End
Queen Latifah-Hard Times-Universal
Brian Mcknight-She-Motown
Quantic-Don’t mess with a hungry man-
Emanon-Count Your Blessings-Shaman Work Recordings
Different Corners-Nicola Conte Sahib’s Samba Version-Ricky-tick Records
John Davis and the Monster Orchestra-Can’t Stop-Nervous
Seawind Project feat. Emily McEwan-Free-Knee Deep USA
McNeal and Niles-Summer Time-Chocolate
Alice Russell-Hurry On Now-Tru Thoughts
Terri Walker-L.O.V.E-Def Jam
John Legend-Used to Love You-Columbia
Conya Doss-Just Because-Dome
Bah Samba-Portuguese Love-BKO
Amarie-One Thing-Columbia
Johnny King and The Fatback Band-Peace, Love not war-Kay-Dee Records

Saturday, February 05, 2005

Playlist - 5th February 2005

Johnny Burnette & the Rock 'n Roll Trio -The train kept a rollin' -Hip O Select
Iggy & the Stooges -You better tun -Fat Possum
Moon Mullican -Seven nights to rock -Ace
Jimmy Johnson -Woman love -Ace s
Bo Diddley -Bo Diddley-it is Raven
Wayne McGhie & the Sounds of Joy -Dirty funk -Birchmopunt
Lan Di -Rock 'n roll -Pathe cdr
Medeski Martin & Wood -Mani gato -Blue Note
Dub Trio -Drive by dub -ROIR
The Necks -The boys 1 -ReR
Lonlon Nykeu-De Mi Amor-Network
Orchestre de la Paillotte-Kadia Blues-Network
Issa Bagayogo-Koroto-Wrasse Records
The Minus-At the Organ-Yep Roc
Ian Moore-New Day-Yep Roc
Iris DeMent-I don’t want to get adjusted-Flariella
Joanna Newsom-Sprout and the Bean-Drag City
Margaret Lewis-Shake a Leg-Ace
Denise and Company-Boy what’ll you do then-Ace
The Kills-No Wow-Domino
The Earlies-Bring it Back Again-679 Recordings
Bamjimba-Dud by drak Phantom-
Darqwi-Dervish-Timeless Music Project

Tuesday, February 01, 2005

Dub Review - February 2005

BLACKSTAR

CHAMPION DJ / KUNTE KINTE

CONGO NATTY RECORDINGS 12" VINYL

Rather than take the well worn path of becoming a mediocre and inevitably unsuccessful British hiphop artist in 1994 Rebel MC started the label 'Congo Natty', followed by its various affiliates, as an outlet for his new passion, jungle. The name 'Congo' was taken from the African drum sound and 'Natty' represented Rastafarianism. "Kunte Kinte" had an earlier origin derived from the film based on the Alex Hayley book ‘Roots’, with a soundtrack that influenced a roots instrumental and dub reputedly recorded by the little known Battersea group Black Volts, the track was rough mixed by Paul "Groucho" Smykle at London’s Island studios inspiring countless of versions. Although it was never released dubplates still manifest via eBay and specialist auction. On this version Rebel MC uses some slow deep wheezing horn samples and an Elder chant that must have a Count Ossie provenance as a cleansing intro to the drum and bass cataclysm to follow, complete with rapid syndrum set on stun this is as pure an exposition of UK Jungle ever committed to vinyl.

DADDY TEACHA

RALLY ROUND / DUBLIFTMENT / VERSIONS

OPERATION SOUND SYSTEM 10" VINYL

Operation Sound System started out in 1996 in the unlikely environment of Blackburn, North East Lancashire, as a pragmatic offshoot of live dub band Sasquash who consistently struggled to gig out in the North West and beyond. Blackburn was not really such an unlikely spot as many dub renegades had hidden out there in the past, not least the legendary Jukebox Johnson a.k.a. Roger Eagle, creative godfather of Blood & Fire records and an inspiration to the fervour that fuelled the reggae reissue industry. Nick Sasquash a.k.a. Dubite has also taken motivational approach to the promotion of reggae in the north and it’s a surprise its taken so long to issue a single, albeit with Daddy Teacha taking the lead role. Shame as the lead track here suffers from the vocals bubbling along occasionally flat and slightly under the mix, so it’s the tune on the flip ‘Dubliftment’ that better represents with the synth horns swathing the mix in true UK steppers fashion.

MARTINEZ feat. St.HILAIRE

GRANDMA

CRUCIAL SOUNDS 12" VINYL

Crucial Sounds is apparently a subsidiary of Guidance Records out of Chicago, although nothing is known of Martinez this tune could easily have come out of Vienna or Berlin, though this may be the effect of the ex-Tikiman’s vocals. Perhaps less grainy that a Rhythm & Sound production with the b.p.m. stepped up, the sentiment of the lyric is purely respectful of and in tribute to the grandmother/grandchildren relationship, a subject that for some reason would seem difficult to explore outside of that reggae framework – ‘conscious reasoning’. The flip is an extended true dub with the swaying bass up in the mix and the introduction of Paul St.Hilaire’s indistinct murmurings rolling throughout the track.

OKI

AINU DUB

CHIKAR STUDIO CD

Oki is the world’s most prominent performer of the Ainu Tonkori, a long, flat stringed instrument with an unfretted soundboard that produces mysterious overtones. The Ainu are an ethnic race, distinct from the Japanese, who inhabit areas and islands near Hokkaido. This set is compiled from remixed versions of tunes selected from previously released albums and was originally conceived as a special edition for a summer 2004 concert tour. Oki’s approach fuses reggae, africana and electronica with Ainu folk melodies. He is an active participant in the United Nations' Working Group on Indigenous Populations and on his last album collaborated with a native American flautist, an Australian Aboriginal band, a Taiwanese singer-songwriter, an East Timorese poet and a Siberian vocalist. His idea of dub as a ‘rebel music’ is refreshing: "…….makes thieves uncomfortable who steal our land and songs but makes our children happy". And ‘Ainu Dub’ is certainly like nothing you have heard before, the wistfully brittle sound of the Tonkori may suggest kora, sometimes qin or guitar but more often that not is an invention of its own, I’m currently on my way back to the website to search for the source (www.tonkori.com)

RICO

TROMBONE MAN

TROJAN 2xCD

Focusing on Emanuel ‘Rico’ Rodriguez' work from the sixties and early seventies ‘Trombone Man’ features all the celebrated trombonist's major solo recordings of note from the period many culled from his albums ‘Blow Your horn’ and ‘Brixton Cat’, tracing his career from his competent but derivative Jamaican r’n’b, boogie and shuffle sides through to the earlier phase of his hard hitting reggae material, cut for producers such as Bunny Lee and Lloyd Campbell. This double CD may be more of an historical, albeit important, document in the annals and development of reggae rather than being enjoyed as a straight listen through. Any newcomers to Rico’s work are better directed to the awesome ‘Man from Wareika’ from 1976, the artist’s greatest achievement, or ‘That Man is Forward’ his ‘comeback’ album cut for 2-Tone.

EARL 'CHINNA' SMITH

DUB IT!

NATURE SOUNDS CD

A dub version of ‘Check it’, 1983’s debut album from the iriginal hardcore dub poet Mutabaruka is at last ’given an outing by producer, label owner and reggae’s most cultural modern guitarist Earl ‘Chinna’ Smith. Such was the impact of Muta on hard hitting poems such as ‘Witeman Country’, ‘De System’ and "Everytime a ear de soun’ " that it was inevitable the music would take a supporting role but with great session musicians Augustus Pablo, Leroy 'Horsemouth' Wallace, Carlton Barrett, Dean Fraser, Bobby Ellis, Nambo Robinson and Earl 'Wire' Lindo a revisit of these great rhythms is overdue. Recorded and mixed at Kingston’s Tuff Gong Studios through the early eighties the sound mix is sparkling as to be expected from the great Errol Brown.

SUGAR MINOTT

AT STUDIO ONE

SOUL JAZZ RECORDS CD/2Xlp

A timely opportunity to reappraise Lincoln ‘Sugar’ Minott’s largely underestimated contribution to the history of reggae and development of ‘rhythm’. Coming to Brentford Road as part of the African Brothers the young singer was slotting in all to comfortably as studio all-rounder before he applied his talents to re-working the old, classic Studio One rhythms to produce new homemade versions for Clement Dodd – a trick already pulled by the likes of Joe Gibbs and the Hookims at Channel One. His ‘Live Loving’ and ‘Showcase’ sets for the label provided a foundation for an international career but to his credit the singer remained focussed on nurturing talent with Kingston’s ghettos and maintaining his roots base. Anyone who has become familiar with the excellent Soul Jazz Studio One series will be thrilled by the parade of great versions reeled out by one reggae’s greatest vocalists at his peak.

VARIOUS

THE LOVERS ROCK STORY

KICKIN’ CD

Through the seventies Dennis Harris was the proprietor of some of the great independent reggae labels of the UK. His imprints included DIP, Lucky, Rama, Serious Business and cut into their grooves were some of the heaviest roots tunes being produced in Kingston, London and Birmingham. However Dennis really made his mark when he teamed up with John Kpiaye and Dennis Bovell to produce and market a truly unique Black British product – Lovers Rock. Although revisionists would like us to believe that the streets around London’s Ladbroke Grove were awash with Burning Spear and Aswad in 1977, Lovers complemented Rockers on the sound systems and the bass was just as heavy. Originating with Louisa Marks’ ‘Caught You In A Lie’ produced by Bovell for Lloydie Coxsone, this newly created genre found its true voice through acts like Cassandra and Brown Sugar, the latter featuring Caron Wheeler later of Soul2Soul fame. Unashamedly commercial in their approach their tunes were massive in North London but had little support on radio save for pirates, consequently great sides like Brown Sugar’s ‘I’m In Love With A Dreadlocks’, ‘Black Pride’ and their version of Barbara Lewis’ ‘Hello Stranger’ complete with horn section borrowed from Althea & Donna’s contemporary smash ‘Uptown Top Ranking’ were restricted to an audience that could really appreciate their value. A reappraisal is overdue and this great compilation is an essential addition to the history of black music in the UK.

VARIOUS

STUDIO ONE DISCO MIX

SOUL JAZZ RECORDS CD / DOUBLE LP

Its syndrums agogo on this early eighties discomix extravaganza as Soul Jazz really test out the nerve of those of have faithfully followed them though their extended Studio One retrospective series, but when the set opens with the intro "Bus’ it now star …!" followed by the dedicated Curtom stylings of Lloyd (Robinson) & Devon’s (Russell) ‘Push Push’ all resistance fails. Although it could be argued that the albums’ centrepieces, Willie Williams’ ‘Armagideon Time’ and the Ethiopian’s ‘Muddy Water’, have been aired many times the inclusion of a few rarities more than compensates. ‘A Night in Ethiopia’ is a Jackie Mittoo nyahbinghi laden take on the Satta theme, there’s a rare outing for Judah Eskender Tafari on the pulsating warning of ‘Rasta Tell You’ and its good to find Winston ‘Mr.Fixit’ Francis represented by his classic ‘Going to Zion’. Can’t afford to miss this one.

WUZI KHAN

SS ICK OH NI

METEOSOUND 12" VINYL

Perversely the Berlin-based Yum Yum Club MC drops his debut as a producer in instrumental fashion, perhaps a bid to break out of his previously self-imposed breakbeat shackles. As home of the nu electrodub skool the Meteosound label is the place to be for these five disparate tracks, veering from the seemingly straight relaxed batacuda loop of the title that gradually gives way to the muted slow motion strings of a Bernard Hermann score and a lazy sleaze style Miles horn figure into the naggingly insistent guitar frills of ‘Overdose Soul’ that could be a revisit of Money Mark’s doodles of five years ago. The flip hits even more spots as the b.p.m. rate fires up on a ‘Samba in the Jungle’ only to descend back into more familiar Berlin territory with ‘Dubber’, a nasty little slow skank that’s tempted into a jungle pace with rapid guitar chops before settling back into a brisker glide through to the fade. The EP title remains a mystery.

VIBRONICS

DUB FIRE PARTS 1 & 2

LUSH 7" VINYL

The Lush label, based in Gothenberg, must have the patronage of an enlightened patron of dub to continue supporting UK roots acts, previously issuing singles on the likes of Hughie Izachaar, TenaStelin and Alpha & Omega Leicester-based Stevie Vibronics arrived on the UK dub scene in awe of the Aba-Shanti Sound System and was then supported by the Zion Train boys. Last year’s ‘Dubliftment 2004’ was one of the top nu roots efforts of the year and this single continues the theme. As might be expected the first half of ‘Dub Fire’ is a straight read-through of the theme, but part two totally mashes the place with a fat synth ruling the rhythm to exhaustion. It’s got to be good to pick up these small-run singles in support of a truly independent-minded label.

Saturday, January 29, 2005

Playlist - 29th January 2005 - Baked Goods

POLMO POLPO -Kiss Me Again and Again -(Intr_Version)
BITSTREAM -Orange Room -(Modern Love)
ARCTIC HOSPITAL -Siren On My Shoulder -(Narita)
ANDY STOTT -Sight -(Modern Love)
GOSUB -Drake Pass -(Device)
MASHA QRELLA -Destination Vertical -(Morr Music)
TARWATER -Babylonian Tower -(Morr Music)
F.S. BLUMM w} DAVID GRUBBS -Nachhall}Chroma Key -(Morr Music)
FEAR OF MUSIC -Millions Screaming -(Blowout)
CHRONOMAD -Masmoudi -(Alien Transistor)
EYVIND KANG & TUCKER MARTINE -Braille Oscuro -(Conduit)
KAMA AINA w} TOMMY GUERRERO -Two Fingers -(Folkcore)
BARBARA MORGENSTERN & ROBERT LIPPOK -Please Wake Me Up For Meals -(Monika)
PSAPP -Curuncula -(Arable)
DAVID SYLVIAN -The Good Sun (Yoshihiro Hanno Remix) -(Samadhi Sound)
GOLDMUND -25 Thousand Miles -(Type)
MARSEN JULES -Fanes D'Automne -(City Centre Offices)
EMILIANO TORRINI -Sunny Road -(Rough Trade)
KHONNOR -Crapstone -(Type)
GRIM DUBS VOL 1 -Unknown -(Werk)
RHYTHM & SOUND w }SUGAR MINOTT -Let Ja Love' -(Burial Mix)

Saturday, January 22, 2005

Playlist - 22nd January 2005

The Megatons -Shimmy Shimmy walk (Pt 1) -Ace
The Anglos -Incense -Ace
Howling Wolf -I am the Wolf -Ace
The Country Soul Revue -Junior Soul beat -Casual
Ali Farke Toure -Cherie -World Circuit
Bebe Manga -Amie -Network
John Fahey -The singing bridge of Memphis Tennessee -Vanguard
Oki -Hutare dub -Tonkori
Master Musicians of Bukkake -Enter the Wang/Bukkake sunrise -Abduction
Sun City Girls -Chameleon Street Hit Parade/ Skull Block/ Original of the Aboriginal/ Dead Sea Catholics/ Dark Eyes -Abduction
Ostad Elahi Hymes et suite ey Dawud -Le Chant du Monde -7741026
Wolf Eyes -Rattlesnake shake -Sub Pop
The Prefects-625 lines-Acute Records
Cass Mccobs-Sacred Heart-4AD
Levellers 5-Be Happy-Probe
Jacqueline Fuentes-Sinuoso Tropico-Putumayo
Toto Bona Lokua-Lisanga-Putumayo
Keith Frank and the Soileau Zydeco Band-Three Little Birds-Putumayo
Buchann-Sweet Angeline-Goldrush
James Yorkston and The Athletes-Shipwreckers-Domino
Basil Gabbidon-Iveree-Rough Guide
Papi Levi-Mi God Mi King-Trojan
Burt Cokain and Nirbanna-International Mishkin-Voltage Records
Raoul Bjorkenheim-Circles-Cuneiform
Miss Kitten (Mad Professor Mix)-Happy Violentine-Novamute
Bag o Wire-Reservoir-Harmless
Andrea Parker-Nobody’S Perfect-Touchin Bass

Saturday, January 15, 2005

Playlist - 15th January 2005

Congo Natty-Kunta Kinte-Congo Natty
Jubbs-Marcus Garvey-Chronic
Slaughter Mob-Dub weapon-Rephlex
Jah Warrior-Impostor dub-Age of Venus
Bobo & Agony-Soca Taliban-Honest Jon's
Justin Hinds-One bird in hand-- Island
Soul Syndicate-War Dance (Bongo Riot)-Trojan
King Tubbys & Mafia All Stars-Don't think about dub-Trojan
I Roy-Hot Stuff-Trojan
The Sharks-How could I live-Studio One
Sugar Minott-Hang on Natty-Soul Jazz
The Righteous Flames-I was born to be loved-Studio One
I Jahman-Moulding-Tree Roots
John Carpenter-The End (Remix)-Harmless
The Damned-Smash it up-Chiswick
Notsensibles-Wrong Love-Eli Records
Henry Thomas-Jonah in Wilderness-Iris Music
Southern Sons-I’M Free at Least-Iris Music
Eastern Lane-No 5-Rough Trade
Need new body-Coffee shop gitl 2-Pickled Egg
Heidika-There is No Cure-Sustain Release
Oddfellows-Carry the Great Cold ON YOUR BACK-Pickled Egg
Ali Shaheed Muhammed-From DJ 2 Musicians-Garden Seeker
L’ Altra-A Day Between-Hefty Records
L’Pierre-Touchpool-Melodic
Black Dog-Invoke-Science Recordings

Saturday, January 08, 2005

Playlist - 8th January 2005 - Funkology

Manzel-Space Funk-Dope Brother
Juel-Groove-Erect
Intuit-Planet Birth-Compost records
Goldie Alexandre-Go Back-Chaz Ro
Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings-What is we all stopped paying taxes-Daptone Records
The J.B’s-Thank you for letting me by myself and you be yours-Polydor
The Neptunes-Don’t worry about it-Virgin
John Legend-Used to Love you-Sony
Van Hunt-Down here in hell (with you)-Capitol
Ty-Government-Big Dada
Bobo-Set you free-CBS
The Sunburst Band-Till the end of time-ZRecords
Donald Banks-Status Quo-4th Br’dway
Quantic-Don’t joke with a hungry man-Tru Thoughts
Captain Sky-Wonderworm-avi
Snoop Dogg-Let’s get blown-Geffen
Sir John Roberts and the sophisticated Funk Orchestra-Do you belive in Fate-Venture Records
The Pointer Sisters-Yes We Can Can-Soul Jazz Record’s
Weldon Irvine-It’s Funky-Saucerman
Funk Brothers-I heard it through the grapevine-Motown

Saturday, January 01, 2005

Playlist - 1st January 2005

Steve and Christiaan in the Blackburn + Fenny

Ranking Dread -Bom dub -Silver Camel
James Eastwood -Inner space -Pressure Sounds
Augustus Pablo-Song of the East -Pressure Sounds
King Tubby -Dub piece -Pressure Sounds
Martinez feat. Paul St.Hilaire -Grandma -Crucial Sounds
Dubben -Cuba Cabana strand -Gamm gamm
Jstar -Tooting gangsta -Jstar j
Tom Waits -Circus -Anti
Circle – cdr- -
The Techniques -World without love -Trojan
Armando el Majujo -– Arruga la canriga -World Music Network
Daniel Johnston -Dream scream -Gammon Records
Wuzi Khan -Dubber -Meteosound
Dennis DJ -Tire a camisa -Essay recordings
Ranking Joe -Clark’s booty style -Trojan
George Faith -To be a lover -HipO
Animal Collective -Visiting friends -Fat Cat
Cambodian Rocks -track 6 (artist/title n/k)-
Cambodian Cassette Archives -Track 6 -Sublime Frequencies
Nathaniel Mayer -I found out -Fat Possum
Lee Perry -Vampire horns -Trojan
Rhythm & Sound feat. Willi Williams -See mi yah -Burial Mix
Jeb Loy Nichols -Wanted man -Mojo

Sunday, December 19, 2004

Playlist - 19th December 2004

Rockers Special 1st aired on the 24/6/90 with selections by Steve Barker, Steve Barrow, Lol Bell-Brown and Noel At Dub Vendor

Dub Syndicate -On The Wire Theme
Augustus Pablo -King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown
Jacob Miller -Baby I Love You So
Augustus Pablo -The Big Rip-Off
Augustus Pablo & Chosen Few -Java
Augustus Pablo & Jah Iny -El Rockers
Augustus Pablo -El Rockers (Clavinet Cut)
Augustus Pablo -Rockers Rock
Ricky Grant -Who Are Babylon/Babylon Man
Augustus Pablo -Dread Eye
Augustus Pablo & Herman -Aquarius Rock
Augustus Pablo -Iggi Iggi
Augustus Pablo -Feeling Moody
Augustus Pablo -Sahara Rock
Augustus Pablo -Hap-Ki-Do
Augustus Pablo -(Unkown Title)
Augustus Pablo -Cinderella In Black
Augustus Pablo -Pablo's Big Ride
Augustus Pablo -Black Out
Pablo Rockers All Stars -Unity Dub
Augustus Pablo -Unfinished Melody
Pablo All Stars -Melody Dub
Hugh Mundell -Run Revolution A Come
Augustus Pablo -Ras Menilik Congo (Harp)
Rockers All Stars -Roots Dub
Augustus Pablo -Earth Wind And Fire
Rockers All Stars -Cool Shade Dub
Paul Whiteman -Say So
King Tubby's -Say So Version
Latty -Can't Hide
Augustus Pablo -Pablo's Theme Song
Augustus Pablo -Tubby Dub Song
Augustus Pablo -Tubby Dub Song
Augustus Pablo -Fat Baby
Keith Hudson & Family Man -Pick A Dub
Augustus Pablo -Organ Style
Simplicity People -K.G's(Half Way Tree)
Simplicity People -K.G's(Crossroads)
Augustus Pablo -Classical Illusion
Augustus Pablo -Guiding Red
Simplicity People -Gussie Special
Augustus Pablo -Far East
Jacob Miller -Who Say Jah No Dread
Augustus Pablo -Ethopia
Sis Frica -One In The Spirit
Delroy Williams -Babylon Boys/Version

Saturday, December 11, 2004

Playlist - 11th December 2004 - Funkology

The Impressions-We’re a winner-Resist
Jacqui Williams-Real Love-Real Side
Gary des Estage-All I Wanna Do-Promo
Jimmy Jones-Live and Let Live-High Tone
Johnny Pate-Did you Mean Maybe-Warner Bros
Manzel -Midnight Theme-Dope Brothers
Thunder Lightening and Rain-Superfunky-
Esther Williams-It feels real good-Friends and Co
Mark Rae-Reach Out to Me-Sony
Wonita-The Ones-
Bugz in the Attic-Booty La La-Bugz in the Attic
Clyde Alexander-Gotta Have Your Love-Counterpoint Records
Lono Brazil-Ooh Love-Sony
Fertile Ground-Spirit World-Counterpoint Records
Reel People featuring Angela Johnson-Can’t Stop (Kenny Dope Remixes)-Papa Records
Trey Sonz ft Carl Thomas-Feels So Good-
Kenny Bobien-Hiya Luv-King Street
aGerald Levert-Crucify Me-Atlantic
John Legend-Live it Up-Sony
Urban Mystic-Long Ways-Warners
Vanessa Freeman-The Way-Chilli Funk
Heaven and Hell Orchestra-Watcha Gonna Do-MCA Records
Cymande-Bra-Soul Heaven
Herbie Hancock-Stars in Your Eyes-Columbia

Saturday, December 04, 2004

Playlist - 4th December 2004

Steve from Beijing + Nick from Operation Sound System

The Sharks-Music Answer-Soul Jazz
Eric ‘Rickenbacker’ Frater-Last date part 1-Motion 1
James Eastwood-Darkest night-Pressure Sounds
The Tenors-Crop Me Donkey-Trojan
Charlie Boy-Funky Strip-Pressure Sounds
Burning Spear-New Civilisation-Soul Jazz
Llyod and Devon-Push Push-Soul Jazz
Wayne Jarrett -Holy Mount Zion-Wackies
The Heptones-Move On-Heartbeat
Lacksley Castell-What a great day-Auraluxx008cd
Papa Levi-Mi Go Mi King-Trojan
Jah Batta-I don’t wait to wait-Wackies
Dennis Bovell and Brown Sugar-Hurtin-Kickin
Linval Thompson-Natty Pressure Them-Makasound
Aquasky-Red Out-Black Noise
Tokyo Paradise Orchestra-Skarada Dub-This is AfroArt
Operation Sound System-Rally Round-Operation Sound System
Superqueens-Let’s not call in the heavy bombers-Skinny
65 Days of Static-Retreat Retreat-Montreme Records
Num-Rocket-Best Before
Daniel Dale Johnston-Don’t Let the sun go down on your grievience-Gammofon
Jason Darling-Night in my Head-Yep Roc
Nora O’Connor-Til the Dawn-Bloodshot
The Great Northwestern Hoboes-Change your tune-Viper
The Heavenly States-King Epiphany-Baria Records

Wednesday, December 01, 2004

Dub Review - December 2004

DOCTOR ECHO

DOCTOR ECHO

ANICCA CD

Doctor Echo is Justin DeHart from Sacramento, California, originally drummer in live dub band The Defendants he’s been mixing dub for over ten years and now relocated to Los Angeles. This is the Doctor’s self-released second album recorded between 1997 and 2002 without the aid of sampling or sequencing. Having said that this is the kind of album where I approach the review with, to coin a phrase, mortal dread. Although each tune stands as well constructed and executed, listening through the whole fourteen tracks I was overcome midway by a boredom that begat a strange forgetfulness – how long to go, where had the tunes gone? Despite the involvement of guitar guru Tyler Pope of Outhud, !!!, LCD Sound System et al there was just nothing to grip here, and as for Nkosazana Divine’s spoken vocals nothing more than the embarrassing fifth-form whimsy. Perhaps a holiday on the East Coast is called for?

DUBBLESTANDART

HEAVY HEAVY MONSTER DUB

ECHO BEACH CD

Dating back to 1988 Paul Zasky and Robbie Ost are part of the underground Austrian axis of dub that now circles Vienna’s Dub Club in times just as paranoid. Dubblestandart gorge on a living feast of rhythm pals for this ‘international dub stardom or bust’ album - Sly & Robbie, Keith le Blanc, Dreadzone, Manasseh, Mikey Dread, Dillinger and Mad Professor are just the names that come readily to mind. The title might be borrowed from Madness but the sound is more derivative of Dub Syndicate and the multiples of their UK progeny, with the emphasis on up-tempo steppers and one drops sprinkled with sampled vocals, vintage or contemporary. Any remix of ‘Kung Fu Fighting’ can only be preferable to the original and this set works best past halfway when we get to le Blanc’s remix shot of ‘Terrarists and Inhalers’ and Camel’ vocals on "Watch the Future’ and by which time we have already met the incredibly monikered Sonic Colin! Like many other bands across Europe Dubblestandart have taken risks in attempting to raise awareness of and combat their own country’s high degree of racism, so some of the painfully earnest lyrics must be forgiven.

THE DUB TRIO

EXPLORING THE DANGERS OF

ROIR CD

Catching the great Ernest Ranglin playing live a few times over the past few years has certainly been one of my reggae highlights, especially his improvisatory versioning of classic tunes from his ‘Below the Bassline’ album. I just wonder if the excellent Dub Trio took old Ernie as inspiration? They are Joe Tomino on drums and melodica, Stu Brooks on bass and keyboards and DP Holmes on guitar and keyboards. This acoustic-based live dub band out of New York City reminded me so much of the Necks in the Echo Chamber even before I notice the first track on their debut CD was entitled ‘Drive By Dub’. Before becoming Dub Trio the band played club gigs at the Knitting Factory, Tonic, NuBlu and elsewhere around the Tri-State area billed as a nameless band performing live dub, when people began referring to them as the "Dub Trio" the name just stuck. Prosaic but strangely apt for these three instrumentalists who record "live" dub in real-time, direct to tape with few overdubs fusing electronic, rock, and jazz techniques – in all languages this music simply rocks. The album is a mix of studio and live tracks – I assume they wanted to cement their live rep – and reveals an astonishing maturity belying their recent emergence, any doubters should start with ‘Awakening Dub’ made up from liberal quotes from classic JA tunes.

JAH BATTA

ARGUMENT

WACKIES CD/LP

Basically this is a Sugar ‘Lincoln’ Minott Youthman Promotion production on behalf of Bullwackies with rhythm tracks laid at Channel One circa 1982 and voicing, overdubs and mixing back in the Bronx. The chat comes direct from the Yellowman & Lone Ranger school of military march style slowed down steppas – "Ribbitttt! Flash it! Do it! Mash it! Rock it! Style and Fashion!" best demonstrated by the outstandingly scatted ‘I Don’t Want to Wait’ which spookily just ends mid track as in ‘outtake’! ‘Hold On Pon The Woman’ laments the DJ’s woman defecting to the producer using Jah Bob’s ‘So Much Trouble in the World’ as springboard whilst ‘Informa’ is a do-over the said producers hit tune. Just what Jackie Mittoo could add to this who knows, not prime Wackies fare by any means but some folks just can’t resist this back in style eighties DJ ‘biddlybong’ stuff.

VARIOUS

AQUARIUS ROCK - THE HIP REGGAE WORLD OF HERMAN CHIN-LOY

PRESSURE SOUNDS CD / DOUBLE LP

The Chinese first arrived in Jamaica in the early nineteenth century and quickly made their mark in the business world after their contractual release from indentured labour. A century later they were to make invaluable contributions to the development of Jamaica’s indigenous music scene, both creatively as musicians, DJs and producers and also as label and record shop owners. Their amazing story is yet to be told, but when it is pride of place will go to Herman Chin-Loy, the first to record the young Horace Swaby who he renamed Augustus Pablo and producer of the first dub album – ‘Aquarius Dub’. This excellent compilation of Herman’s early productions is centred around that album, recently seen around in vinyl reissue form, but it’s the other tracks here that make this release probably the strongest reggae reissue this year. Stylistically the sound is pre-roots with a strong soul influence along the lines of other recent reggaefunk sets, but there the similarities end as Herman takes a lot more liberties with the inputs as best evidenced by his own mystical DJ interjections on Pablo’s first tune ‘Iggy Iggy’, a version to The Heptones ‘Why Did You Leave’, reproduced in scat style on ‘Soul Vibration’. The ‘Augustus Pablo’ credited on ‘Snowball and Pudding’ is actually keyboardist Glen Adams, Herman had adapted the name as it sounded like a Spaghetti Western hero and later passed it on to the soon-to-be melodica king. Charlie Boy’s ‘Funky Strip’ has a Steve Wonderesque harp lead on top of a doped-up Ray Conniff vocal refrain, whilst ‘Roadrunner’ sounds like four Junior Walkers in a line and there’s a beautiful early Beres Hammond track ‘No More War’ with a wild dub totally out of synch with the rest of the set. Final tune is Pablo with ‘I Man’, a rhythm that eventually became ‘Cassava Piece’ before finally mutating into the almighty ‘King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown’.

VARIOUS

SCRATCHY SOUNDS

TROJAN 2XCD

It cannot be long before it becomes our turn to put together a compilation for Trojan but in the meantime avoid trying to work of the logic of targeting this set at a demographic of punters who once turned out to see a Clash gig and just check the track listing. Barry ‘Scratchy’ Myers was the Clash’s DJ and one time resident jock at London’s Dingwalls venue and as such was plied with vinyl for selection or rejection. So this double CD set can be purely judged on the questions – ‘do I have these tunes and if not, do I need them?’ If you are a hopeless case then on vinyl will be the cure, otherwise its good to hear alternate vocals on the ‘Skylarking’ rhythm from Errol Dunkley and DJ Lizzy, the extended 12" version of Niney’s ‘Blood and Fire’, the harmonica version to the Tennors ‘Ride Your Donkey’ titled ‘Copy You Donkey’ and one of Scratch’s weirdest outings ‘Baffling Smoke Signal’. And that’s just the first disc highlights.

VARIOUS

KING JAMMY IN ROOTS

AURALUX CD

Although Jammy was not the creator of the mighty ‘Sleng’ he still could be hailed or cursed as the father of the digital era through his championing of the monster casio riff that ruled the reggae world for months back in 1985. This selection predates his digi eminence to a time when ‘Prince’ Jammy was emerging from the tutelage of his master, King Tubby. Jammy’s forte was the nurturing of local talent and under his wing the fledgling Black Uhuru developed into a major force in reggae. This late roots pre-dancehall set captures the producer/engineer at his cultural height on a set of extended mixes and dubs that are stately and moodily restrained as befits the conscious content. Pick of the bunch are the two ‘Death in the Arena’ derivatives ‘Walk with Jah’ by the late Hugh Mundell and ‘Name of the Game’ by the unknown (at least to me!) Fantails, plus Mundell again on the ‘Queen of the Minstrels’ rhythm with ‘King of Israel’ followed by a dubstrumental by Pablo ‘King Pablo’. But all is eclipsed by the nine minute extended version of Lacksley Castell’s ‘What a Great Day’ where Jammy hits his funky heights on the dub with a filtered cymbal and swaying horns on rubbing percussion mix.

VARIOUS

THE LOVERS ROCK STORY

KICKIN’ CD

Through the seventies Dennis Harris was the proprietor of some of the great independent reggae labels of the UK. His imprints included DIP, Lucky, Rama, Serious Business and cut into their grooves were some of the heaviest roots tunes being produced in Kingston, London and Birmingham. However Dennis really made his mark when he teamed up with John Kpiaye and Dennis Bovell to produce and market a truly unique Black British product – Lovers Rock. Although revisionists would like us to believe that the streets around London’s Ladbroke Grove were awash with Burning Spear and Aswad in 1977, Lovers complemented Rockers on the sound systems and the bass was just as heavy. Originating with Louisa Marks’ ‘Caught You In A Lie’ produced by Bovell for Lloydie Coxsone, this newly created genre found its true voice through acts like Cassandra and Brown Sugar, the latter featuring Caron Wheeler later of Soul2Soul fame. Unashamedly commercial in their approach their tunes were massive in North London but had little support on radio save for pirates, consequently great sides like Brown Sugar’s ‘I’m In Love With A Dreadlocks’, ‘Black Pride’ and their version of Barbara Lewis’ ‘Hello Stranger’ complete with horn section borrowed from Althea & Donna’s contemporary smash ‘Uptown Top Ranking’ were restricted to an audience that could really appreciate their value. A reappraisal is overdue and this great compilation is an essential addition to the history of black music in the UK.

VARIOUS

ROOTS OF DUB FUNK 4 – RISE OF THE ECLECTIC DREAD

TANTY CD

Over 500 tracks were submitted for consideration for inclusion in this latest chapter of Kelvin Richards excellent nu dub series and the sucker punch is applied right from the opener supplied by Steve Mosco as Jah Warrior and a track lifted from the Prince Alla’s "More Love" sessions mixed by Dougie Wardrop at Conscious Sounds studio with brass sounds by the Crispy Horns Section and in the mix is a genuine 25 year old analogue spring reverb. Most of what follows is mere validation of the part Kelvin Richards is playing in sustaining not only the UK but also the global dub scene. Standout tunes come from Prise d’Assaut (Paris), Social Living Sounds (Stockholm), Piano B (Italy & Martinque) and Kelvin himself as Dub Funk Association whilst Doctah X’s illbient excursion is plainly out of place

VARIOUS

STUDIO ONE DISCO MIX

SOUL JAZZ RECORDS CD / DOUBLE LP

Its syndrums agogo on this early eighties discomix extravaganza as Soul Jazz really test out the nerve of those of have faithfully followed them though their extended Studio One retrospective series, but when the set opens with the intro "Bus’ it now star …!" followed by the dedicated Curtom stylings of Lloyd (Robinson) & Devon’s (Russell) ‘Push Push’ all resistance fails. Although it could be argued that the albums’ centrepieces, Willie Williams’ ‘Armagideon Time’ and the Ethiopian’s ‘Muddy Water’, have been aired many times the inclusion of a few rarities more than compensates. ‘A Night in Ethiopia’ is a Jackie Mittoo nyahbinghi laden take on the Satta theme, there’s a rare outing for Judah Eskender Tafari on the pulsating warning of ‘Rasta Tell You’ and its good to find Winston ‘Mr.Fixit’ Francis represented by his classic ‘Going to Zion’. Can’t afford to miss this one.

Saturday, November 27, 2004

Playlist - 27th November 2004 - Baked Goods

THE REMOTE VIEWER -I'm Sad Feeling -(City Centre Offices)
I'M NOT A GUN -Sundays Will Never Change -(City Centre Offices)
STATE RIVER WIDENING -Desertesque -(Vertical Form)
JOHN SMITH -Bible Belt Babylon -(Peanuts & Corn)
NOAH 23 -Lizard Lion Eagle -(2nd Rec)
MCENROE & BIRDAPRES -Party People -(Vertical Form / Peanuts & Corn)
INSIGHT -Time Frame -(Brick)
BABY BLAK & TEAM SHADETEK -Just Begun (Scritchstrumental) -(Sound Ink)
LUSINE -Autopilot -(Ghostly International)
NKTAR -Truizm -(Outside)
THOMAS FEHLMANN -Prefab -(Plug Research)
BITSTREAM -F Codex -(Modern Love)
MADE -Dino -(SCSI-AV)
DIGITAL MYSTIKZ -B -(DMZ)
VEX'D -Lion -(Subtext)
ANTONIO FERREIRA -O Verao Nasceu da Paixo de 1921 -(Tomlab)
HENK BADINGS -Kain en Abel, Part 4, Arioso -(Basta)
BASIL KIRCHEN -Phibe's Preparations & Locusts -(Perseverance)
MARSEN JULES -Chanson Du Soir -(City Centre Offices)
ARTHUR RUSSELL -Answers Me -(Audika)
LOS JIBAROS -Decimas De Nacimento -(Dust To Digital)
ARVE HENRIKSEN -Bird's-Eye-View -(Rune Grammofon)
TAPE -Crippled Tree -(Hapna)
THE BOATS -Lessley -(Moteer)
MADDOX BROTHERS & ROSE -Jingle Bells -(Dust To Digital)

Saturday, November 20, 2004

Playlist - 20th November 2004

Steve from Beijing, plus poets Hovis Presley, Thick Richard, with help from Kevin and Melanie

Motohiro Natashima-Yap-Lo Recordings
Max de Wardener-Brown Snowflakes-Accidental
Trans Am-Pretty Close to the Edge-Thrill Jockey
Wagon Christ-Nightly night-Ninja Tune
Fat Jon-Day -Exceptional
Blockhead-Insomniac Olympics-Ninja Tunes
Operator-Tisch-Benbecula
Milanese-So malleable-Warp175
The Gasman-Imodium-Planet Mu
Hrvatski-Gemini-Planet Mu
Fonica-Scoot-Bip-Hop
Culture-Two Sevens Clash-Soul Jazz
Gone TO Earth-3 Drummers-Probe Plus
The Black Keys-Girl is on mind-Epitaph
The Rocks-We Got it-Scratchy Records
CC ADCock-Y’all’d think she’d goot o me-Yep Roc
Dolorean-Violence in a snowy fields-Yep Roc
Butches-Make yr Life-Yep Roc
Clinic-Circle of Fiths-Domino
Horace Andy Meets Mad Professor-Babylon Bridge-Ras
Prince Jammy-Slaughterhouse Five-Auralux

Saturday, November 13, 2004

Playlist - 13th November 2004 - Funkology

Red Astaire-Follow Me-Gamm
Nas-Bridgeing The Gap-Urban Division
Quantic-Don’t Mess-Tru Thoughts
Linn-Available-Jugglin Records
Rick James-Taste-Expansion Records
Gaturs-Gatur Bait-Tuff City
Sandy’s Gang-Hungry Sean P Edit-
Rainbow Brown-It Ain’t No Big Thing-Pap records
Ultramagnetic MCs-Ego Trippin-Ninja Tune
K-Rob-Cafe del Soul Weekend-
Sabrina Malheiros-Estaco Verao-Farout Recordings
Leela James-Good Time-Up Above
Alison Crockett-Cross Roads-Wah Wah
The 411-Teardrops-Sony
Johnnie Taylor-What about my love-BBE
Claudja Barry-Dance, Dance, Dance-Sussed
Keep Hope Alive-Underground Dance Artists United for Life-King Street Sounds
Cheryl Lynn-Sweet Kind of Life-Geffeb
Undisputed Truth-Big John is My Name-Soul Jazz
Detroit Spinners-You Go your Way-Atlantic
James Mason-Sweet Power your Embrace-Resist Music

Saturday, November 06, 2004

Playlist - 6th November 2004

Brian Jackson helps On the Wire with a show dedicated to John Peel

The Nightingales-Well done underdog-Cherry Red
Gene Vincent-Green Back Dollar-CEDE International
Bo Diddley-I’m a Man-Playtone
Captain Beefehart-Grow Fins-Reprise
Medicine Head-Next Time the Sun Comes Round-Dandelion
Incredible String Band-Mercy I Cry City-Electra
Requia / The Yellow Princess-Irish Setter-Vanguard
Frank Zappa-St Alfonzo’s Pancake Breakfast-Rykodisc
Loudon Wainwright III-I am the way-CBS
Little Walter-My Babe-Instant
Syd Barrett-Terrapin-EMI
Keith Hudson-Satia-Blood and Fire
Culture-Too Long in Slavery-
Upsetter-Django’s Shoots first-Trojan
Tapper Zukkia-Pick Up the Rockers-EMI
Burning Spear-Social Living-Spectrum
King Tubby-Dub Fi Gwan-Blood and Fire
Redskins-Unionised-Strange Fruit
Half Man Half Biscuit-Lock up your mountain bikes-Probe Plus
The Fall-wINGS-Rough Trade
Robert Wyatt-yolanda-Hannibal
The Membranes-Muscles-Round
The Delgados-Sucrose-Chemikal Underground Records
Anhrefen-Rhedeg-
Kanda Bongo Man-Sango-Nascente
The Bomb Party-Life’s A Bitch-Grunt Grunt a Go Go Record
The Bhundu Boys-Wenhamo Haaneti-Shed Music
Calvin Party-Maybe if Only-Probe

Monday, November 01, 2004

Dub Review - November 2004

BURNING BABYLON

KNIVES TO THE TREBLE

MARS RECORDINGS CD

Burning Babylon is a one man dub reggae project from Boston, Massachusetts USA, created by Slade Anderson previously guitar honcho in various punk/metal bands in the Boston area in the eighties before he underwent overdue bass conversion, ditched all that toppy twang and headed overboard deep into the bottom end. Glen Brown’s Tubby mixed ‘Termination Dub’ provided the Damascene moment. Despite some of the titles here almost sounding like an intended pastiche, ‘Mash Up the DJ’ and ‘Satta Stylee’ indeed!, it’s clear from the music within that the boy Slade was determined not come out to play until he understood the rules. But inhabiting the ground between early Twilight Circus and Dub Syndicate is not a place to stay for long right now, following the guide from ‘Mek we Jump’ the set’s sweetest and least glum track might be the way to go.

BURNING SPEAR

SOUNDS FROM THE BURNING SPEAR – BURNING SPEAR AT STUDIO ONE

SOUL JAZZ RECORDS CD/DOUBLE LP

Mooted some twelve months or so ago this compilation has arrived at last. Such was the clash of personalities between Spear and Coxsone that he once remarked when asked about their collaboration "It is not I who deal with Clement Dodd, it is Clement Dodd who deal with I", nevertheless it was Studio One that gave him his ‘Iriginal’ voice. As both the debut albums, ‘Presenting Burning Spear’ and ‘Rocking Time’ have appeared sporadically over the past few years, both with alternate versions included, Soul Jazz have wisely concentrated on Winston Rodney’s magnificent series of first singles. Opening with ‘Door Peeper’ as mystical a piece of music that has ever been committed to vinyl and still a total sonic mystery, the productions come across as starkly confrontational with little embellishment save for the forlorn harmony of Spear’s now forgotten partners. As essential as Pressure Sound’s exemplary ‘Spear Burning’ in any serious collection of Spear and JA rhythm.

DILLINGER

COCAINE IN MY BRAIN – ANTHOLOGY

TROJAN DOUBLE CD

Another misleadingly titled set from the reggae juggernaut, although the forty odd tracks on this compilation pull together the critical sides from the DJ’s early days with Lee Perry, notably the ‘Tighten Up’ version ‘Cane River Rock’ and ‘Dub Organiser’ the key track from recently reissued and unmissable Scratch meets Tubby album ‘Blackboard Jungle’, plus a couple of killer Niney the Observer produced toast on Dennis Brown tunes - ‘Flat Foot Hustling’ on ‘Here I Come’ and the combination with Trinity ‘So Long Rastafari’ – it’s the missing years which are as notable. To make an anthology on the last of the great 70s DJs truly definitive the addition of material from the Hookims at Channel One is essential, as is stuff from Yabby You, Pablo, Winston Riley - and not forgetting Clement Dodd. What we get though is stacks of later Bunny Lee cuts and self productions many revisiting the tried and tested rhythms that have had the reissue retread a too many times of late. Nevertheless, through the 70s Dillinger was in prolific and often majestic form and failing bagging the essential ‘CB200’ album this is an OK place to start for any newcomer to his work.

THE HEPTONES

DEEP IN THE ROOTS

HEARTBEAT CD

With the departure of such a towering figure as Leroy Sibbles one would have expected the Heptones to fold, resting on their glory days with Studio One and Lee Perry. However the arrival of Dolphin ‘Naggo’ Morris signalled a new lease of life in the late seventies under the brief patronage of Niney the Observer at the then firing Channel One studios. Morris, coming with stripes from his ‘Su Su Pon Rasta’ (versioned as ‘Heavy Manners’ by Prince Far I) for Joe Gibbs, was a seasoned roots vocalist and an inspired replacement. This set compiles tracks from two albums, ‘King of my Town’ and ‘Better Days’, adding four towering discomixes which are the real bonus. The dub mixes employed by Niney come from Channel One house engineers Maxie and Bunny Crucial and seem heavier than the popular rockers sounds of the time, especially the roiling bass and thundering low-end piano on ‘Through the Fire I Come’ as tough a sound as the Heptones ever got on record.

WAYNE JARRETT

SHOWCASE VOL.1

WACKIES CD / LP

Not only Wayne Jarrett’s finest moment on vinyl but this is also a truly great dub showcase album belying the generally accepted factoid that nothing outstanding happened back in the early eighties. Fresh from cutting the wonderful ‘Youthman’ for Glen Brown, Wayne Jarrett’s roots credentials were impeccable as he arrived at Bullwackies for the application of Clive ‘Azul’ Hunt’s sparklingly original arrangements and Lloyd Barnes neo-Black Ark honeyed mixes. All the six tracks here are the highest expression of classic Wackiedom, from the fuzztone riffs ladled on the dub mix of the Horace Andy cover ‘Every Tongue Shall Tell’ to the flutes fluttering in and out of the ‘Rockfort Rock’ version ‘Bubble Up’ that make the restrained syndrums of ‘Darling Your Eyes’ almost acceptable. But all is mere preparation for the seductive descent into the viscous void that is the mix of ‘Holy Mount Zion’ a deeper than deep version of ‘Drum Song’, and the fourth Studio One rhythm on the set. But beware, before rushing out to buy this one best check if you have ‘Bubble Up’ in your collection - it’s the same album!

METEO / THIEL

BASS AND GO

METEOSOUND CD EP

Daniel Meteo and Tom Thiel are known as collaborators in the hiphop-influenced dub electronica vehicle "Bus". Whilst Bus have released two vinyl EPs and an album on Pole's high profile ~scape imprint, Meteo’s label has them debut under their own names. Leading the way now for European soulful dub-technologies out beyond the boundaries of sub-glitch Bus take the four tracks on this EP in wildly different directions. The title track mid tempo stepper with stripped ricochets of afro beats and multiple non-repeated riffs and handmade guitar working on top of a stomping riddim. ‘We Do’ returns to a more comforting half tempo for a classy off the edge dub where at times its tempting to hear a suggested melody. Side ‘b’ opener ‘Miami’ revisits an imagined stoner travelogue soundtrack from the eighties whilst ‘Towards Bounce’ could be a snatch of Louis and Bebe Barron in dub, and not before time.

PAUL ST. HILAIRE

DR’S DEGREE

FALSE TUNED 12" VINYL

The artist formerly known as Tikiman returns from his travels with Rhythm & Sound with this restatement of his claim to the title once owned by I Jahman Levi as the meditative man of reggae. His disappointing album from last year ‘Unspecified’ finished with a remarkable drifting beatless track ‘Changerine’ to be followed up by the remarkable 'Faith' collaboration with Rene Lowe of Scion, released on his own False Tuned imprint from late last year. The three tunes on this EP hopefully offer a similar portent for what is to come as 'Guiding You' picks up from his earlier work with Mark and Moritz but de-grains the sound to reach a warmer place with harmonies and murmured indistinct spoken vocals with the overall effect suspended somewhere between longing and melancholy. ‘Dr.’s Degree’ is a far darker affair with a random rhythm and stretched efx to stress test the studios insurance policy. ‘Roosty’ takes us back to the classic territory the artist attempted to explore with limited success on ‘Unspecified’, in a smaller dose it becomes much more appealing.

VARIOUS

DREAD BROADCASTING CORPORATION – REBEL RADIO

TROJAN DOUBLE CD

In the early eighties radio in the UK was a pretty dire place to be, even virtually, then came DBC – straight outta Neasden, the Dread Broadcasting Corporation, and although its high-rise block signal failed within a few miles, captured cassettes would reach further into the nation. DBC was the place that Ranking Miss P and Louis Lepke started alongside x amount of reggae dedicated DJs not least the dear departed Dub Bug – where is he when we need him now? The tunes on this peerless collection start with UK’s reggae anthem Aswad’s ‘Warrior Charge’ and pick up Papa Levi’s seminal UK proto fast-chat ‘Mi Go Mi King’ and Prince Lincoln’s outernational plaint ‘Humanity’ early on disc one with further flavour of the times added by archive jingles from original broadcasts cut into the mix throughout. Lest we forget that back in the day there were no reggae reissue labels or well-selected compilations of contemporary hits. Cassettes made by fans of the music or dubbed off shows on DBC were the only way to hear the music, certainly for those outside Jamaica or London. Also great to hear the mix on this collection reflecting the output of the station with Lovers clashing with dub, roots with ska, dancehall with calypso – no sanitised ‘urban’ programming.

VARIOUS

OUT ON A FUNKY TRIP: FUNK AND SOUL FROM RANDY’S 1970-1975

MOTION CD/LP

Prefaced by a couple of steaming ten inchers this collection showcases some of the funkier sides cut at Randy’s by producers Vincent Chin and his son Clive. Many Jamaican musicians tended to earn their living not through reggae sessions but playing soul covers at the touristy hotels spread along the island’s north coast, just as many UK jazzmen kept body and soul together by playing in popular dance bands. And the chops are all gathered here, whether from the younger guys best represented by Sly Dunbar in Skin, Flesh and Bones or the older school with guitarist Lyn Taitt brought to Jamaica pre-ska times by Byron Lee. ‘Stepping Up’ has Taitt deliver a Steve Cropper-esque solo whilst it sounds for all the world like Junior Walker arriving for the sax break, the title track is straight out of a Roger Corman exploitation movie with unrestrained moog generating a brand new frug agogo. Perversely the highlight tag is reserved for a Toots b-side, a horns-fuelled Memphis style dubstrumental jog sounding reminiscent of that classic you can never remember.

VARIOUS

STUDIO ONE FUNK

SOUL JAZZ RECORDS CD/DOUBLE LP

For years Sound Dimension may have provided token classic reggae funkified breakbeats for the bags of many a dance DJ in the shape of ‘Greedy G’ and ‘Granny Scratch Scratch’ but few had the nerve to explore much further. Just a glimpse of what they missed is in this set of nineteen JA originals, US covers and dub versions of earlier hits – mostly instrumental – that makes the most satisfying listening experience so far in this series and probably its most commercial offering. Blood and Fire utilised Curtis Mayfield’s song title ‘Darker than Blue’ to kick off the idea of relating reggae back to one of its many cultural feeds subgenre now its a whole new marketable proposition and new subgenre. Standout tracks here are Vin Gordon’s trombone version of Larry & Alvin’s ‘Your Love’ in a style that could have come out of a 1950’s Los Angeles r’n’b combo, the Sharks’ bass led rarity ‘Music Answer’ from the early eighties but bred from a yet to be born mechanikal funk, Cedric Im Brooks sax take on Horace ‘Skylarking Doctor’ mysteriously emerging as ‘Idleberg’ and ‘Poco Tempo’ a rare Studio One melodica outing as Pablove Black versions ‘Sidewalk Doctor’.